Thursday, March 24, 2011

Good Article About Preparedness


I've just read Lessons Learned From the Japan Earthquake and Tsunami on the Survival, Emergency Preparedness, and Self Reliance blogsite.

As we've seen in these past weeks, what happened in Japan is just about the worst case scenario we can imagine -- massive earthquake, tsunami, nuclear reactor disaster. That country had prepared for an earthquake up to magnitude 8.5, for a tsunami of up to 25 feet, and I assume they had plans in place for a reactor issue. That should have been enough. Anyone would think that was enough.

And yet, they were hit by a 9.0 earthquake, a 30 foot tsunami, and multiple reactor breakdowns  all at the same time.

The lesson to be learned is that we can never be too prepared. This seems like a good time for all of us to re-evaluate our emergency strategies and make them stronger.

Tuesday, March 22, 2011

Living in the Wilderness

wildernessliving.net     
 Alex Peterson is the creator of Dare to Escape, an excellent site that covers all manner of topics related to becoming self-reliant. I very much enjoyed his thoughts in the piece presented below and I feel sure you'll find them both entertaining and enlightening, as well.


Why Go To The Wilderness Like A Pioneer And Live In A Hut?


Author: Alex Peterson

Some go to the wilderness for the escape in order to live free.

This Dare To Escape topic addresses why escape is so necessary for the pioneer wannabe who wants to live free, undergo personal transformation, experience quiet solitude, and possibly become a hermit. This person wants to live life in the country, immerse completely in the wilderness life, as told in the story of Walden by Thoreau. This someone is also so "diy" conscious, they can't bear the thought of staying in civilization another day.

I believe I have read Walden probably a dozen times by now. Most English teachers I know cannot stand Thoreau or his works. I am not sure why that is. Perhaps it is the 1412 lexical reading level. Possibly they dislike Thoreau because of his cynicism of mankind or civilization to be able to solve a single significant problem. In whatever case, I suppose I side with Thoreau. I guess there just are not that many English teachers that I like myself.

With that said, we are back to the question of "why?" WHY go to the wilderness and drop off the edge of the earth, as civilization would coin the phrase? I cannot answer for you. I can only answer for myself, but see if any of what I write rings a bell with you. I will just bet it does. My favorite reason, boiled down into one word is "escape." Yes, I want to be a pioneer because I long for days of old. I have read the old wagons west stories about people who took off with their entire families in a Conestoga wagon to raise chickens in a home-made coop and become the pioneer I bet you dream about becoming yourself. Most of us want to live free, but we have no idea what that may really mean. Some of us think there is a transformation down the leaf-strewn trail. We believe we will have a vision, hear music, but to be honest, probably none of those particular things will happen. If they do, just count it as the gravy and appreciate it for what it is.

Yet, I think "escape" says it all. We crave the solitude. We want to be by ourselves. We want a life in the country. We want the wilderness. We have no idea how we are going to do it. We may not know where we are going to do it. But we feel, deeply, way down inside, that we are going to do it. That somehow, this is our destiny.

What is your destiny? What is mine? Are these really questions that we can answer for each other, or even for ourselves? You may want escape. You may even be the pioneer type. But deep down inside of you, there is a reason for wanting to do all this. In this day and age, let's face it, feeling this way isn't normal. Most people are perfectly happy chained to an 8 to 5 job, a 30 year mortgage, two 6 year car payments, and a life of debt. When you say live free, you may mean deliverance from all these things. Or you may simply mean to be shed of all these psychic encumbrances. Whatever your reasons, you should have some good ones before undertaking this endeavor of leaving civilization. To be able to live free is truly liberating in the sense that you no longer have the same reports you did before, but you will still need to eat, drink, shelter, clothe, and otherwise be merry. If you feel your destiny lies here, then welcome, we are on the same road.

And what a road it is!

Some go to the wilderness for the transformation they perceive will happen from living a life in the country.

When you are sitting behind that boring desk, in that boring cubicle, listening to a supervisory dullard endlessly pontificate on the most useless of subjects, it is easy to imagine how that escape to the country can be a miracle, an epiphany, a vision of bliss and cloyingly sweet butterflies. "Ah!," you think, "What pioneer ever had to put up with this stupidity?" And so, your thought life is off again. Suddenly you have moved out of the room and into the pasture to live free. You feel that transformation is only around the corner. You understand that a simpler life, a life of solitude and simplicity await you out there in those woods, or on that mountain, or on that rocky crag overlooking the sea. Maybe you see yourself changed by becoming a hermit, living a pastoral life in the country, surrounded by the wilderness.

Hey, that is the vision I have. And think of it what you will, it is how I cope with the shackles of the accoutrements of civilization. I believe a transformation does exist in making the move. Most people would scoff. Those are the same people whose lives are mortgaged for the forseeable future. But you and I are different. Our drummer doesn't play in the same marching band that everyone else is attuned to. Our drummer is radically different, and we listen to that beat. It is the beat that frees us, liberates us, and places us in the placidity of quiet and love. The place to which we are headed is a place that will finally allow us to be ourselves, and not have to be who everyone else dictates we must be.

I think fear is the opposite of transformation. Therefore, it stands to reason that the cause of most of our frustrations is fear. We know we can escape the meaningless minutiae. But it scares us. We do not live like a pioneer. Our idea of being able to live free involves getting a chicken sandwich from the drive thru menu at our favorite fast food restaurant. Our idea of transformation is surviving to the weekend so that we can (hopefully) enjoy two days of solitude. We curl into a fetal ball like a hermit and do whatever we have to do to grog into work on Monday morning in a reasonably functional fashion. We do not undergo transformation to our blissful life in the country, the wilderness, because we are afraid.

Most people are afraid to leave what society has taught us is "security." But, if you will look around you, all those lies are starting to crumble. There is no such thing as an automatic "security" within the confines of a conformist society. As I write this, 1 out of 10 Americans are out of work. We have a 4 TRILLION dollar national debt. And, there is no end in sight.

Faith is all fine and good, and I know I am all for having faith, but I also know that nothing is going to happen until I put my back into it. The thing that separates Dream from Reality is that little thing called muscle. My transformation will come when I plunge through the fear and do that "crazy" thing that society mocks me for. My transformation will finally be realized when I find myself trekking through the wilderness to live free, escape the insanity, and breathe deeply of the air that 25 people before me have not breathed.

In the end, we all get what we worked for the most. That rubs some of us the wrong way. It even rubs me the wrong way, and I wrote it. I must say, I think I was waiting for a miracle. I kept waiting for the "right time." I figured I would "get around to it someday." Sound familiar?

If I want transformation in order to live free in the wilderness, no angel is going to come down from Heaven, wave a magic wand, and grant it to me. Like everything else I have ever accomplished, it will take a detailed plan of sequential tasks and necessary resources. That is what we are here to do. It really does help to write it all out. Writing is a hard enough task that you will find that you only write what you truly are passionate about. Every successful person on earth and in history was a list writer. So that is how we begin our transformation to realize our dream. We begin with pen and ink.

Some go to the wilderness because they have a pioneer spirit, crave solitude, or want to live like a hermit.

I think the key to The Self-Sufficient Life and How to Live It lies in educating ourselves. There is no reason to reinvent the wheel. The summit you and I attempt to reach has been reached thousands of times before. So, we all should, like Galileo, stand upon the shoulders of giants. Let us learn from those who have gone before.

While escape and living the pioneer life is our objective, I believe we must clearly identify not only what we do not want, but what we want. We are all able to identify that which we hate easily, but have a bit of a wrinkled brow when it comes to identifying that which we love. We say we want to live free, undergo transformation, have solitude, and be a hermit, with a life in the country. But what does that look like?

Do you feel as if you were born 200 years too late? Join the club. I feel that way. Most of you reading this feel that way. Certainly we are creatures of modern marvels and born into a comparative lap of luxury as opposed with how our forefathers lived, but we feel something itching and boiling in the marrow of our bones.

This is not to say that people of 200 years ago did not live in cities. Many of them did. It is just that our populations were far more dispersed than they are now. Those who wanted the convenience (and expense) of city life lived within the city while those who were more of the diy type of person lived out in the country.

They probably did not mean to be so, but most of them lived a life of what you and I would call a hermit. They were the veritable pioneer. They lived a life of solitude in a wilderness where the animals had not yet admitted to themselves that man was Master. They grew their own food. They had animals, they milked cows, they woke up at 5:30am, and went to bed when the sun went down.

There is a section of our population that would read this article and say "Oh my, this is crazy. WHO would want to live this way?"

There is another section of our population that reads this article and they get a dreamy and glazed look in their eyes. You can almost hear the Green Acres theme music play throughout their daydream. This is the daydream that Henry David Thoreau wrote about in Walden, and then he turned it into reality.

Maybe you want to trade in your 5 bedroom estate for a thatched roof hut that has solar cells mounted outside.

I do.

Maybe you want to get away from the constant noise that accounts for how most of us live in urban subdivisions these days.

I do.

Maybe you want to become a hermit, but society has taught you how shameful that word is. Society is largely a collection of clueless, interdependent idiots who have no idea of what they stand for anymore. Do you want to become a hermit?

Shamelessly, I do.

It is the wilderness, the idea of how to live free, the solitude, and the transformation that drives people to go live like a pioneer.

I suppose I have rambled a bit. But the life I seek is a bit of a rambling life.

We have seen the city and we have seen the country. The country is better. We escape the shackles of the grind and seek how to live free. We seek solitude. Even now, though we think we still seek it, the transformation has already begun.

We have quit saying those meaningless phrases that pass for small talk at the office anymore. Some of us have quit talking at the office at all. Most of us know that there is an imaginary EXIT sign up ahead, and we are headed for it.

When you go to some of the online public domain libraries like Project Gutenberg and read about the life of the pioneer, you will see that in almost every single case, that is who that person was. He or she paid no attention to the "expectations" of society, and marched to the melody of that different drummer.

We are drawn to it like the moth to the light. In this dream we delight. We go together, hand in hand, singing the song of being able to live free. We may not be off to see the Wizard, but we are off to see the new country. We are off to see the country that you cannot taste at 55 mph, but rather that which is savored at a leisurely saunter.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/stress-management-articles/why-go-to-the-wilderness-like-a-pioneer-and-live-in-a-hut-4279069.html

About the Author

Alex Peterson writes about homesteading and living off the grid.  His philosophy closely echoes that of Henry David Thoreau in Walden.

His website is:

Dare To Escape
daretoescape.com

   

Thursday, March 17, 2011

The Biggest Downside of Self-Sufficiency

From nunativs.com

I've just found a wonderful blog, The Self Sufficiency Club, and I'm excited to share this advice from that blog's owner, George. Thanks, George!

Author: George L.

This just hit me and I had to get it off my chest. Every endeavor in this life, without any exception, has its pitfalls. We are mere humans and we like to take things to extreme, because we think that the more we do, the better results we get.

Not true at all!

Self sufficiency has already proven to change lives. It's already changing the lives of thousands of American families who, right now, couldn't care less about peak oil or the inflation.

But...

Some people, because they want so much to be self-sufficient, the start too much ... alone.

They take this too seriously and think they need absolutely no one in order to survive.

The fact of the matter is, self sufficiency is just as much about doing it yourself as accepting the help of others.

And the first group of people who are critical to your self sufficiency are your family.



The absolute first thing you need to do when you decide to become self sufficient (or if you already are but want to take it to the next level) is to involve your spouse and children in the daily household activities.

You have to give your kids the mindset of self-sufficiency from an early age and actively involved them in gardening, feeding the chickens, making and installing solar panels (under strict surveillance of course) and everything else.

Again. Don't  do this alone or you'll feel so exhausted you'll start thinking self sufficiency won't work. Seek the help of others, let them help you and help them in return.
Article Source: http://www.articlesbase.com/diy-articles/the-biggest-downside-of-self-sufficiency-3633692.html

About the Author

If you enjoied my advice, visit my blog right now for more high quality information about self sufficiency: http://www.selfsufficiencyclub.com
  

Thursday, March 10, 2011

Building A Local Economy

Image from comsumerist.com                                          

As we watch the economic situation in this and other countries grow bleaker and bleaker, we must also consider how the average person is going to survive higher prices and lower incomes.

For most of human history, barter has worked just fine. Of course, it's much easier to engage in a barter economy within our own small communities. Trading live chickens for lawnmower parts via the internet isn't practical, is it?

The trouble is that we've lost our local economies to mega-corporations and international financial outlets. This means that we must rebuild locally and relearn our local trading skills.

I've just run across an excellent piece entitled 31 Ways to Jump Start the Local Economy that serves as a solid guide for anyone who has the courage and enthusiasm to spearhead such an undertaking.  It lists things you can do as an individual, with friends, and with your community to build a stronger union with neighbors and friends.


As I have said before, and as has been proven repeatedly over the years, the best defense we have against any threat -- any threat!-- is a strong and dedicated band of fellow travelers. I encourage each of you to protect yourself by building a local economic fortress to protect against the instability in our financial ocean today.



Wednesday, March 2, 2011

Satellite Real Estate - guest post



I cannot get my wife way from the television set. She is determined to move abroad and now she sits there all day with her eyeballs glued to the tv screen. She watches a lot of tvbydirect because her favourite show at the moment is House Hunters International. She says that she likes it because of the informative style that the shows hosts promote the houses for sale. Real estate prices have gone down all over the world and will rise in price and then fall again as the markets do. The tv show gives advice on where and when to purchase and how to barter with real estate agents in virtually any country.

The thing I liked when I do watch the program are the beach shots. I have always liked the beach as I am a keen deep sea fisherman and have a kinship with the sea. I will move abroad one day as long as it is near the sea. The show on the telly has helped people like me realise that their is another world other than the one which we live in at the moment, and that life can be lived anywhere on the globe.

Be Prepared for Disaster

It seems the recent months have brought us every imaginable natural disaster in this country -- earthquakes, floods, blizzards. While some people waste time arguing about whether these events are or are not a result of global warming, the more practical among us have taken steps to be as prepared as we can be when natural disaster hits home.

Do you recall images from Louisiana after Hurricane Katrina came ashore? Thousands and thousands of people were scrambling to the rooftops, hoisting hastily-made signs that begged for help.

Help did not arrive in a timely fashion, as many had clearly expected it would. That should have been a strong lesson for us all -- in the event of catastrophic events, we are probably going to be on our own for quite some time.

Several of my earlier posts have addressed the need for preparation. One can never do enough to prepare, of course, because it is impossible to know just what will happen and what resources will be most needed.

The smart thing to do is to learn all we can and prepare for everything we can imagine.

To that end, I recommend a free online course called Are You Ready? An In-depth Guide to Citizen Preparedness.  

This FEMA sponsored course focuses on "how to develop, practice, and maintain emergency plans that reflect what must be done before, during, and after a disaster to protect people and their property. Also included is information on how to assemble a disaster supplies kit that contains the food, water, and other supplies in sufficient quantity for individuals and their families to survive."

Don't wait -- it's never too soon to take protective and proactive measures.